Tokamak Energy K.K. celebrates official launch at British Embassy Tokyo

The British Embassy in Tokyo was the perfect setting to celebrate the inauguration of our Japanese subsidiary Tokamak Energy K.K. this week.

Distinguished speakers and more than 100 guests from government, industry and academia joined us for our special event at the historic Chiyoda building.

We are proud to have developed many important partnerships with leading organisations in Japan, including Furukawa Electric Group, the University of Tokyo, Kyoto Fusioneering, and Sumitomo Corporation.

With this strong, established ecosystem in place, and exciting opportunities ahead, we look forward to delivering breakthrough technologies that will reshape sectors and address some of humanity’s most pressing challenges.

Ross Morgan, President of Tokamak Energy K.K., introduced Dr. Toru Fukushima as the company’s new Vice President and Country Manager, and said afterwards: “We are thrilled to formally establish Tokamak Energy in Japan. This event was a major milestone and celebration for the company, supported by a great number of our friends, supporters and partners.

“We value these personal and business relationships deeply and look forward to a prosperous future together, accelerating towards the commercialisation of fusion energy and leading the development and deployment of transformative high-temperature superconducting (HTS) technology.”

Emil Levendoglu, Minister and Deputy Head of Mission, British Embassy Tokyo, said in his address how he was “struck” by the way Tokamak Energy has formed such positive relationships and how the company is “a template” for what the UK Government is trying to build across multiple sectors in Japan.

We would like to thank the British Embassy for hosting our event, which also included speeches in an entertaining mix of Japanese and English from Akira Tsuneto, Deputy Director General for Science Technology and Innovation Policy, Cabinet Office, Hideya Moridaira, President & CEO Furukawa Electric, Professor Akira Ejiri, University of Tokyo, and Margaret Tongue, Minister-Counsellor Economic Diplomacy at the British Embassy in Tokyo.

Yuichi Takase, Tokamak Energy’s Senior Technical Advisor, helped close the event. He said: “With Ms. Sanae Takaichi — a strong supporter of fusion power — now serving as Prime Minister, I believe Japan has an extraordinary opportunity to take global leadership in fusion energy. We look forward to working together with all of you to lead the world in bringing fusion power into commercial reality — right here in Japan.”

1588 894 Tim Summer